Kentucky History Chapter 9 The Civil War in a Border State
Across
- 6. She first disguised herself as a man to enlist in Bragg's army; after being captured and released she rejoined the Confederate army as a woman
- 9. Took over as speaker of the Kentucky Senate and then as governor when Berea Magoffin resigned
- 10. This plummeted due to the dismantling of slavery after the war causing a sharp increase in the cost of goods such as hemp, barley, and tobacco
- 11. Slaves from the seceded states
- 12. Resulted in the most deaths of any Civil War battle in the state and the South's final major attempt to take control of Kentucky
- 15. The only capital of a loyal state captured by Confederates during the war
- 16. This man offered an alternative to Confederate Kentuckians' revisionist history stating, "First we had the cartridge box, now we want the ballot box, and soon we will get the jury box."
- 17. Kentucky's best known Union military unit
- 18. African Americans in Kentucky had uncommon levels of this
- 19. Percent of the total US Colored Troops black Kentuckians provided (by March of 1865)
- 20. Former second lady of the United States and founder of Lexington's Ladies Memorial and Monument Association
Down
- 1. An organization dedicated to gathering and publishing the archives of the Confederacy in order to justify its war record
- 2. The name for John Hunt Morgan's elite company
- 3. Served as a Confederate; scouting and raiding were his trademark
- 4. During the 1863 __________ election, disloyal citizens were forbidden from voting keeping an estimated one-third of potential voters from the polls.
- 5. Bride in "the wedding of the war"
- 7. Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation only applied to states in ___________
- 8. These were required of teachers, ministers, jurors, and public officials early in the war after the general assembly passed a number of laws restricting Confederate sympathizers
- 13. The best known of Kentucky's Confederate units during the Civil War
- 14. Union general who ordered the deaths of four guerrilla prisoners for each Union man killed by guerrilla activity